Saturday, September 12, 2009

A Simple Truth

All my
life I have been seeking Truth. Somehow I knew that it was like chasing my
shadow. Every time I felt I knew the truth I was confronted by the realization
that seeking truth is a never-ending task. Still a part of me knew that there
was something noble about the path my inner longing has compelled me to walk.

What is the truth, and is it possible to know the truth? The
truth seems to change with each passing moment. What was once true is soon
disproved or modified and a new truth has taken its place. So how can we get value from truth if it is
constantly changing and evolving?

Maybe I have finally understood and accepted a simple truth
about Truth. Truth is not just a bundle of facts that we have come to rely on;
but truth is also a concept or notion that can only serve us if we continually
pursue it with impeccability.

A bundle of facts is, at best, a personal or collective
belief system that merely serves us sufficiently in the present moment so that
we may survive, but it is not something carved in stone. Indeed, as soon as we
become convinced that we have discovered the ultimate truth it is the surest
sign that we have again gone astray. Like an onion, as we peel away each layer
searching for the greater or deeper Truth we find at the core there is no
ultimate truth. Ironically as I look back at my life I find, it has been the
journey, the peeling away of the layers, and the impeccable pursuit of truth
that has given meaning to my life.

Ironically, the frustration of seeking truth ends in
acceptance and joy of walking the path where ever it leads, understanding and
accepting that truth is not something to grasp and hold tightly but something
that flows. As seekers of truth we give meaning to the word itself and validate
the process of seeking truth by showing our devotion to the process and our
reverence for the task. So what if there is no ultimate truth, there doesn’t
have to be. Besides, if we reached an ultimate truth the journey would have to
end.

Monday, September 07, 2009

Calling Your Bluff

You
ask, “How could you love me? You don’t even know me.”

Then you must think it is necessary to be or do something
special in order to be loved.

If I loved you only because of to some special quality that
only you possess, what would happen if you lost that quality? Don’t you know
that the “You” that I love does not depend on what you do or who you believe
you are?

Who is that “You” that you hide behind all the
superficialities hoping will make you
lovable?

You pretend that I don’t
know that hidden part of you?

Maybe you secretly believe that you are all the things that
no one could ever love. You secretly tell yourself that when someone says they
love you, that your pretences are working and that they just love all the
things you so cleverly pretend to be.

Why do you work so hard just to be a genuine fake? You
cannot imagine anyone could love a genuine fake like you, unless they were one
too. For you, all those who profess their love must be cunning and deceitful.
But it takes one to know one, doesn’t it? In the game of Blind Man’s Bluff that
you play, everyone must first be wearing a blindfold or you won’t play.

You think you can fool me but the “You” that I love is not
any of the things you believe you are or even pretend to be. The “You” that I
love is, and has always been perfect in every moment. You are left withholding
the real “You” and pretending that’s ok.Meanwhile your soul cries out for
authenticity, secretly hoping that someone smashes through your pretence to
save you from yourself.

So when I say I love you, it is more about me than it is
about you. It says I know there is nothing either of us need to pretend to be. It says I am calling
your bluff.